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The Future Of Work? This AI Company Now Employs More Robots Than People

For years, conversations around artificial intelligence have been filled with predictions about machines taking over jobs traditionally done by humans. Now, one robotics company claims that future may already be arriving faster than many expected. Figure AI, a startup focused on humanoid robots, says it has officially reached a milestone where robots outnumber human employees inside the company. Here’s what happened, why it matters and what it could signal about the future of work.
The announcement came from Figure AI founder and CEO Brett Adcock, who shared a workforce chart on X showing the company’s robot population surpassing its human headcount for the first time.
“For the first time, robots now outnumber humans at Figure.”
The chart, labelled “Headcount vs Robots,” tracks growth between 2022 and 2026. According to the data shared by Adcock, Figure’s robot workforce remained relatively small until early 2025. Then things changed rapidly. As production scaled up, robot numbers surged past 100 before the end of 2025 and climbed to roughly 740 units by the second quarter of 2026.
Human hiring also increased during the same period, growing to around 650 employees. But robots appear to be joining the company much faster than people.

In another post, Adcock shared a photograph showing rows of humanoid robots packed into shipping boxes, accompanied by a brief message: “Power On.”
The development arrives amid growing concerns about automation across the technology industry. According to Layoffs.fyi, more than 119,000 technology workers have reportedly lost their jobs globally this year as companies continue investing heavily in AI and automation initiatives.
Figure AI has attracted attention before. Earlier this year, the company staged a widely discussed “Man vs Machine” challenge, where its Figure 03 robot competed against a human intern during an eight-hour package-sorting shift. While the human participant ultimately came out ahead, Adcock suggested such victories may not last forever, “This is the last time a human will ever win”, he posted on X.

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